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Director, Development and Alumni Engagement, Faculty of Science

Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
CA$10,155 - CA$15,842/Monthly
Senior Level
Full-Time

About the role

Staff - Non Union

Job Category

M&P - AAPS

Job Profile

AAPS Salaried - Development & Alumni Engagement, Level E

Job Title

Director, Development and Alumni Engagement, Faculty of Science

Department

DAE Science

Compensation Range

$10,155.00 - $15,842.17 CAD Monthly

The Compensation Range is the span between the minimum and maximum base salary for a position. The midpoint of the range is approximately halfway between the minimum and the maximum and represents an employee that possesses full job knowledge, qualifications and experience for the position. In the normal course, employees will be hired, transferred or promoted between the minimum and midpoint of the salary range for a job.

Posting End Date

July 19, 2026

Note: Applications will be accepted until 11:59 PM on the Posting End Date.

Job End Date

Ongoing

Science is foundational. Long before someone becomes an engineer, a physician, a kinesiologist, or a forester, they begin with science: a teacher, a lab, a question that is nurtured rather than dismissed. We are seeking a Director who understands that funding science education and research means investing in the pipeline for many of the professions that shape our world, and who brings genuine enthusiasm to that work.

Reporting to and working closely with the Assistant Dean, the Director will help lead a talented development team while personally managing a $4M portfolio of leadership-level donors. The role contributes to a $13M Development and Alumni Engagement program in support of the Faculty's $27M annual goal, a target the team works toward collectively.

What We Are Looking For

We are seeking a dynamic leader who is motivated by challenge and comfortable operating as a self-starter. The ideal candidate brings genuine curiosity about scientific research and the ability to translate that enthusiasm into compelling cases for support.

This individual will have demonstrated success building meaningful relationships within industry, with the credibility and judgment to identify the right partners, earn their trust, and convert shared interest into sustained investment.

As a leader, this person will be equally comfortable mentoring fundraisers who benefit from structure and clear process as they are challenging experienced major gift officers to think more ambitiously. They will be motivated primarily by the success of the team rather than by individual achievement, while still maintaining strong personal accountability for their own portfolio and goals.

Given that many of our initiatives span multiple faculties and units, strong collaborative instincts are essential. We are looking for someone who navigates complexity and ambiguity comfortably, brings creative and analytical problem-solving to their work, and is able to read a pipeline critically while never losing sight of the relationships at its core.

Finally, this is a team that works hard and values genuine collegiality. We are looking for someone who brings energy and a sense of humour to the work, alongside the rigour it demands.

What You Will Do

Working in close partnership with the Assistant Dean, the Director will help operationalize fundraising strategy across the Faculty and advance leadership gift account strategies that require senior administration engagement. The Director will also contribute to building the alumni and donor relationships that support an active multi-year campaign.

As second-in-command on the team, the Director will provide day-to-day leadership and mentorship to a group of career fundraisers, adapting their approach to the needs of each individual, whether that calls for coaching, structure, or a trusted sounding board.

This is an opportunity for someone who wants to help build a high-performing fundraising program, not simply maintain one, and who recognizes science as essential infrastructure behind many of the careers that shape our communities.

At UBC, we believe that attracting and sustaining a diverse workforce is key to the successful pursuit of excellence in research, innovation, and learning for all faculty, staff and students. Our commitment to employment equity helps achieve inclusion and fairness, brings rich diversity to UBC as a workplace, and creates the necessary conditions for a rewarding career.

Job Summary

This position is responsible for assisting with the preparation and monitoring of unit goals, managing and evaluating design, development, and coordination of projects. Broad responsibility for unit's operations in Senior Director/Assistant Dean's absence. Also responsible for components of a defined development program at an average $20+million level with 10+ staff, or managing resource development activity at an average of $4+million annually and responsibility for dealing with complex, confidential information where consequence of error is high. If position has direct donor contact, metrics are included. If no direct donor contact, annual targets to be set by work plan goals and objectives.

Organizational Status

Reports to: One of: Senior Director/Assistant Dean or Executive Director of Development.

Works with: UBC faculty and staff involved in fundraising including the VP Development, AVP, Development, the President of the University and other senior administrators as appropriate.

Contacts: Donors and outside community groups and organizations.

Supervises: May supervise Associate Directors, Development Officers, Development Coordinators, support staff.

Work Performed

Works closely with the Senior Director/Assistant Dean or Executive Director and senior management to facilitate maximum private and public sector support for the University; Assists with the preparation and monitoring of unit goals, manages and evaluates design, development, and coordination of projects; May oversee daily operations of the program or unit including: development and implementation of strategies for closing major gift solicitations; coordinating staffing for major gift solicitations. Oversees administrative functions of the program or unit including: development and implementation of individual plans for identifying, cultivating, soliciting, and stewarding major gift prospects and donors; oversees implementation of appropriate donor recognition; ensuring acknowledgement and stewardship programs are in place; Develops and manages a personal portfolio of major gift prospects (75-150) making face-to-face visits (125-200 annually) for the purposes of discovery, cultivation and solicitation (20-25 annually) for prospects at the major gift level (defined as $50,000 and up). Or annual targets to be set by work plan goals and objectives as approved by Executive Director; Develops proposals and works with donors to generate gifts for priority projects; Manages the donor pipeline, ensuring that appropriate strategies are in place and acted on; Involved in managing and motivating staff; may also be responsible for: planning and approving professional development for staff, hiring, training and terminating staff, conducting performance reviews to ensure annual benchmarks and performance goals are achieved; Mentors and develops fundraising staff, including working with them to develop strategy for donor cultivation and solicitation, “making the ask”; Generates donor/prospect solicitation materials and correspondence; Performs other related duties as required.

Consequence of Error/Judgement

The position is a critical point of contact for donors and university staff in relation to development activities. The Director of Development is expected to make decisions and recommendations impacting the overall development program of the unit. Incorrect interpretation or communication of university policy and procedures or lack of tact, diplomacy or sensitivity in dealing with major donors and senior administrators could potentially result in damaged relationships and credibility, leading to the potential loss of these donations.

This position is also critical in advising and ensuring proper interpretation and implementation of academic and fiscal policies for fundraising, senior administrators, and development staff. The Director of Development is responsible for a portfolio of donors and prospects. If inappropriate advice, incorrect interpretation or improper financial analysis were conveyed to major donors or senior university administrators, millions of dollars could be incorrectly administered or unavailable for disbursement. UBC could be in direct violation of stewardship and trusteeship obligations to donors and for funds received through bequests.

The incumbent participates in decisions concerning the planning, organization and utilization of staff, staff selection and job performance reviews.

Supervision Received

The incumbent works under general direction according to broad objectives. Works independently with discretion relating to donor negotiations, policy administration and interpretation, and administrative responsibilities. Overall strategic planning on global fundraising initiatives is executed in consultation with the Director.

Supervision Given

May supervise Associate Directors, Development Officers, Development Coordinators and/or support staff. Will have responsibility to mentor junior staff.

Minimum Qualifications

University degree in a relevant discipline. Minimum of eight years of related job experience including five years of experience in including fundraising, alumni engagement, advancement experience, or the equivalent combination of education and experience.

Willingness to respect diverse perspectives, including perspectives in conflict with one’s own. Demonstrates a commitment to enhancing one’s own awareness, knowledge, and skills related to equity, diversity, and inclusion.

Preferred Qualifications

Graduate degree and/or an undergraduate degree in commerce, marketing or economics is preferred. Proven experience in Major-Gift fundraising and skilled in strategy development. Thorough knowledge of the university environment and academic structure is preferred. 3 years’ experience meeting or exceeding annual metrics at the Associate Director level, or equivalent. Experience working with a centralized fundraising system an asset. Ability to work independently while exercising good judgement at all times. Well-developed analytical and problem-solving skills are required, along with strategic thinking and skills in conflict resolution. Strong conceptual abilities combined with high attention to detail. Ability to work simultaneously on a variety of complex projects with imposed deadlines; ability to formulate strategic plans; effective communication skills, verbal and written; strong interpersonal and negotiation skills required in liaising with major donors, corporate executives and senior university administration; proven ability to work with the University’s senior-most donors to advance the University’s mission; tact, diplomacy, discretion and sound judgment required.

The incumbent should have the ability to plan, coordinate and supervise the work of others, in order to execute a variety of complex projects with imposed deadlines. Computer experience required; MS Windows environment, Microsoft Office preferred.

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